Kahuna Burger
First Post
I don't know if this is the right place for this, but it seems the best of the EN world forums to try. I have a general quandry about a project and was hoping more established publishers could help me.
What is the obligation/liability of a writer who uses general ideas or flavor from a literary source to produce a D20 'item'? I'm not talking about an entire project or book based on an unconsenting writer, but a spell, prestige class or race inspired by a component of an author's work, where you can't find the same idea in other works. An analogy might be the similarity between the Aliens movies and the Brood that was introduced in the X Men comics later. Or in more concrete d20 terms, a prestige class that uses many of the "stepping out of time" ideas and general flavor of the Time Monks in Pratchett books (sp?).
I would find backward adjusting things till it didn't look inspired intellectually dishonest, tracking down approval for less than a page of work that is significantly different in both presentation and function than the orriginal seems too much hassle for me and the writer, and I don't know if a blurb saying (for example) "Inspired by ideas in The Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett" would draw more problems than it would prevent.
Thoughts, advice, copyright lawyers with nothing better to do?
Kahuna Burger
What is the obligation/liability of a writer who uses general ideas or flavor from a literary source to produce a D20 'item'? I'm not talking about an entire project or book based on an unconsenting writer, but a spell, prestige class or race inspired by a component of an author's work, where you can't find the same idea in other works. An analogy might be the similarity between the Aliens movies and the Brood that was introduced in the X Men comics later. Or in more concrete d20 terms, a prestige class that uses many of the "stepping out of time" ideas and general flavor of the Time Monks in Pratchett books (sp?).
I would find backward adjusting things till it didn't look inspired intellectually dishonest, tracking down approval for less than a page of work that is significantly different in both presentation and function than the orriginal seems too much hassle for me and the writer, and I don't know if a blurb saying (for example) "Inspired by ideas in The Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett" would draw more problems than it would prevent.
Thoughts, advice, copyright lawyers with nothing better to do?
Kahuna Burger


